Think Like a Historian: Introduction to the Halifax Explosion

He would not let us try up the wall for fear something would fall and crush Dorothy and when I told her she’d have to push her head through, some how that it was a matter of life or death, he told me not to tell her any such thing. 23 The back of the house was on fire by then and we got desperate so Bid put all her weight on a piece of wood sticking out and between the three of us we pulled the child out. Nothing could be done for those in the ruins as the fire drove everyone away. 24 One poor woman in the old Gibson house was alive, pinned under the stove, upstairs. The house was burning and another woman was in our field like a maniac. We could do nothing for the woman in the house only pray that unconsciousness would come to her before the fire reached her. It was heart rending 25 and we could do positively nothing to help her. 26 We took the Swetnams back to our ruins 27 and got them some clothes and tried to gather something together. If the fire had not come we could have saved a great deal . 28 Young St was all ablaze and the houses opposite us on Kaye St were in the same condition. We grabed[sic] coats mostly as they were the only things in sight. Upstairs, we could get into the bathroom, Bertha’s front room and the upper hall. All the other rooms were all demolished. I went to my room but all I could reach was my old fur lined coat packed in its box with moth stuff. All my clothes and everything on my dressing table, in fact nothing presented itself to me. Everything was a confused mass of stuff and was piled so against the door that I couldn’t get in. The whole back of the house was blown off and broken water pipes covered me with dirty water and stuff. 29 Downstairs the parlour were[sic] in the same state. Really we could find nothing and we were ordered away or we’d be so hemmed in by fire we’d not get away alive. 30 Bid opened the safe and took out everything. She tore open two sofa pillows and emptied everything into these for bags. 31 We each had new plush coats (mine not paid for) 32 and they were both in the spare room closet—burned. Uncle Murray I can’t tell you how we got away but we joined the crowds of people, cut and bleeding terribly and as we went we put our coats on those who needed clothing . 33 The sights I saw were terrible. Really Daddy was far better off than so many. He was ready to die. His faith in God was always an example to us and when we know he went to Heaven without feeling pain or knowing the agonies that some people have known we feel comforted. Had I been killed when I was knocked down I’d never have suffered, any at all. The suffering came when I came back to consciousness and realized everything. 34 23. As Ethel tried to convey the seriousness of the situation to young Dorothy, Mr. Swetnam tried to protect his youngest child from the severity of the situation. We can infer that this was to prevent Dorothy from panicking. 24. Ethel and the others were forced to leave behind many of the wounded as the houses burned. This hints at the large numbers who died as a result of, and in the aftermath of, the Explosion. 25. Ethel was aware that some neighbours would burn alive in their homes, and there was nothing she could do but “pray that unconsciousness would come” first. From this, we might also infer the importance of Ethel’s religious faith. 26. Ethel may have been trying to alleviate feelings of guilt from not being able to help everyone. 27. Ethel begins describing her family’s home as “our ruins,” suggesting that, while their house didn’t catch fire immediately, it was uninhabitable. Such language also reflects her emotional state and the degree of loss and grief experienced following the Explosion. Ethel was one of more than 6,000 people made homeless by the property damage caused by the Explosion. 28. This alludes to the fact that the fires came not long after the blast. As a result of the fires, the Bonds and many others lost the majority of their belongings. Relief stations set up around the city distributed food and clothing to those in need. Friends and families provided shelter to those who lost their homes, and community shelters were established in churches and theatres to house many others without shelter. 29. From this we learn that Ethel’s house had modern amenities such as running water. 30. We can infer that soldiers, firefighters and others in Halifax feared the fire would spread to the Wellington Barracks magazine and cause a second Explosion. As a result, they ordered people away from their homes (west and south). 31. Having a safe in a residential home was not typical for this time. Owning a safe is a signal of the Bond’s higher class position, compared with most of their neighbours. Ethel and Bertha emptied their safe of valuables, using the pillow covers from their sofa to transport everything. This reveals a survival nature in response to the crisis — ripping apart furniture to take what was needed. 32. The large snowstorm and winter weather that followed the Explosion meant that people needed to recover warm items of clothing. It was typical of the time for items to be put on lay- away or a payment plan. We may infer that Ethel felt a duty to repay the store for the coats, despite being destroyed, as she deemed it significant enough to mention. 33. Ethel and Bertha gathered the coats they could from their house, and shared them with those in need. This demonstrates their charity and willingness to help others. 34. Ethel writes of her father’s faith in God, and her own belief in Heaven. She suggests that the reality of the aftermath of the Explosion is more painful than dying would have been. Bold passages indicate annotations for context . Underlined passages indicate annotations for inference .

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